63 N.J.L. 609 | N.J. | 1899
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This action is brought by the plaintiff, Coyle, against the defendant company for personal injuries received by him while at work in their employ. His employ
After the testimony on both sides was in, the trial judge, considering that the testimony showed, among other things, that the defect in the machine which caused plaintiff’s injury was an obvious one, directed a verdict in favor of the defendant. The plaintiff now seeks to set aside the judgment entered upon that verdict.
That the insecure fastening of the lever to the guide, due to the absence of a bolt, was an obvious defect and one which the plaintiff, by exercising a reasonable degree of caution, would have discovered, is clearly shown by the proofs offered by him.
By those proofs it appears that the bolt had been out for nearly nine months preceding the date of the accident. The plaintiff himself testified that, although he had not observed the absence of the bolt before he was injured, he noticed immediately afterward, while standing in front of the machine, that there was but one bolt in the guide and that there was only a hole where the other one should have been.
It cannot be doubted that a defect so easily seen would have been discovered by him had he used ordinary care in observing if the machine fell out of repair. Although the master is charged with the duty to his servant of providing reason
The testimony in the case would not have supported any other verdict than that directed by the trial judge, and there was consequently no error- in the instruction complained of. Aycrigg’s Executors v. New York, &c., Railroad Co., 1 Vroom 460; Meyers v. Birch, 30 Id. 238; McCormack v. Standard Oil Co., 31 Id. 243.
The judgment of the Supreme Court should be affirmed.
For reversal — None.